Introductory--the finite, its self-transcendence and stability.--The value of personal feeling, and the grounds of the distinctness of persons.--The moulding of souls.--Hazards and hardships of finite selfhood.--The stability and security of finite selfhood.

Introduction, the central experiences. - The concrete universal. - Uniformity and general law not antagonistic to individuality. - The teleology of finite consciousness, a sub-form of individuality. - Bodily basis of mind as a whole of content. - Self-consciousness as the clue to the typical structure of reality. - Ourselves and the absolute. - Individuality as the logical criterion of value. - Freedom and initiative. - Nature, the self, and the absolute.